El Paso Morning Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 30, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 7, 1910 Page: 4 of 8
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EL PASO MORNING TIMES
Published Every r*r In the 'Th*
EL FASO TIMES CUM PANT.
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THE MORNING TIMES, EL PASO, TEXAS.
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Any arroneoua f«f,^nUon.)rT or^oo^ra^on. "wh^h^m."
laputatton of any prr.on.flrrri b), gudly corrected
» The* attention of <h* management.
The MORNING TIMES la the
the County of El Paso
OFFICIAL newepaper of
Kaalern huMne^T^. .-----------
Tribune Bldg..
advert lain* j __________-
Difference Between Pearson and Stillwell.
Mr. Hllltwell, who Ha. ace9mp|Uhed much and will
building,
pruductivo
yet accomplish mure in the way «t »llro»d
converting waale place, *"1 ari“ r’lhln" lnt0
farm, and dotting .be map with pro-,.-roue low*,
tmaallngly replied loth.- duration why he hud aeUete. ‘
route he had Cotter, for hi. orient r."road that he
had laid a ruler on the map and drawn a straight t
Topolobampu <m the Meat (.ouet ot
In Russia where
anything but a
road in Mexico,
to know why Mr.
through HI Paso,
\m
from Katttaa City to - .
Mexico and adopted that n, hla route to the Pacific
< Hie* n. *
Thai la the way they do thlnga
thlnga are admittedly done In
huameaa like way. and Mr. Stillwell "»» very well P«*«-
with hlm.elf and hi, foreign atoekholdera were aim,
satisfied until not very long ago he brought a tramload
ol them through I'd Pa«> enrout. to Inapeet their rale
After going over El Pawn ‘hey wanted
Stillwell bud not built his road
the logical point for crossing the
iiorder on the way Vo the Pacific an,I instated that a lino
l„. |,uilt to this place to compete for the enormous buri-
ns,. already developed and bound to iron as the south-
west develops.
And a Htillnell road will come to El Palm, but It vvl
lose the. golden opportunity that It had before the wise
Pearson syndicate entered the field.
Backed by unlimited English and Canadian capital
the Pearson syndicate began work on the groat plan
build a line from Canadian points on the Oreat Uikca to
the West Coast of Mexico. Recognising the fact that
El Paso was the point to cross the border and rightly
estimating Its value ua a feeder they bought tlu, l.lo
Grande, Sierra Mndro and Pacific and at once began the
work of connecting lip the gaps and extending (he lino to
the Coast, all the time modernising the roadbed, the
bridges and the equipment "f ‘he road.
While buying into great railroad systems across the
United States to 81 Paw), the syndicate was buying and
building great, projects in Mexico that will ho adjuncts
to the great railroad project by developing the agri-
cultural and Industrial possibilities in Mexico.
The Pearson syndicate placed a correct estimate
upon 81 Paso and her future. Mr. Stillwell did not, with
the result that he lost a golden opportunity and the
Pearson lines will parallel the Mexican Stllwell lines and
beat them by several years to the Pacific.
\ In more things than us the logical point at which
to cross the border did the Pearson syndicate value K!
Paso, for It recognised In It the logical distributing point
for the products of its preut Industrial enterprises In
Mexico with iho result that they will establish hero in
El Paso great manufacturing and finishing jdants In-
volving the expenditure of several million dollars.
The eastern rivals of the Pearsons on Wall street
recently undertook to undo them and tie them up, but
failed, except that a time limit was placed upon Ulo com-
pletion of the Pearson projects, which tlinc-llmlt, how-
ever. is all that the Pearsons need in the way of time.
The Pearson syndicate Is building up a great transconti-
nental system which will contribute much to Iho groat*
ness of the future of El J'nso.
Mr. Roosevelt's admission that the magaxlne of
which he Is contributing editor I* paying the expense ot
hla spectacular swing around the west, puts the whole
matter in a different light and leaves Mr, Roosevelt In
a rather sorry position, while leading up to the question
of who paid his expenses to Africa and clinching the sus-
picion that his mugaxlne's business manager must have
been or ought to be press agent for the “biggest show-
on earth."
Amid the boom and bluster nnd the whoops and
yell, and the cataract of glittering generalities and the
other activities and performances of the last ten days,
the Times overlooked the passing of it’s friend the Khun
of Khiva, who followed our other venerated friend the
Ahkound of Swat across the divide just In time to es-
cape having to read Mr. Roosevelt s *Tcn Thousand
Remedies for A. Million Things I would Correct."
Bo, It appears that the president before the last Is
employed as publicity agent for Ihe Outlook and all this
mighty whooping up of things is after the manner of the
old Wtxard Oil sales promoting schemes.
When any Republican wants to talk to Aldrich or
Cannon now they sneak around to the back of the house
and hide in the chimney corner.
- The Kaiser declares he rules by divine right. Tho
people might take a notion some day to demand hit
credentials.
5r
TIk Issue That Caaai Be Dodged.
The Republican party proceed, to the regulation of
trusts upon the theory that there is a distinction without
s difference between the restraint of competition and
the restraint of trade and therefore regulates the trusts
by not regulating them and by gftrlng them greater
power and more opportunity under the tariff law to rob
the people.
It Is Interesting to note that Mr. Taft who wrote
"bully" on the back of the Payne-Aldrich bill and to
help his party out of a hole declared It the “best tariff
bill ever written." now advocate, another revision, while
Mr. Roosevelt also declares that It must be done ovci
again.
It Is a dire strait that forces the Republican party
to acknowledge that a law that automatically brings
grist to the mill of the trusts and graft to the faithful Is
wrong and should be changed.
Only the knowledge that the people are onto the
game the Republican party has so long played and arc
determined to throw off the burden so speciously and
unjustly placed upon them, has forced Mr. Tuft. Mr.
Roosevelt and other lights to try to avert disastrous
defeat for their party by admitting that the tariff law la
wrong and must be revised.
There Is the hope that since the people have
through experience arrived at a realization of the
Iniquity and Inequity of Republican legislation they are
awake to the fact that they can never trust the friends or
protection to revise the tariff In the Interest of the peo-
ple. If they embrace this truth there Is little doubt that
the Republican party will be permanently retired from
power.
Just now there is war to the knife and the kuife to
the hilt as everybody knows between the insurgents, or
as they prefer and deserve to be called, the "progres-
sives" and the standpatters and In the criminations and
recriminations that are going on the truth Is coming out
and the enlightenment of the people increases.
Up in Maine the Democrats are putting some of the
practical effect of the Republic tariff policy up to
both the progressives and Ihe standpatters to tho em-
barassment of both, and to the Information of the peo-
ple and there are no people on earth to compare with
Maine Republicans for blindness and obstinacy.
For instance, a bill for household supplies— pro-
visions- -bought In 1896 amounting to $9.85, and a bill
for the same Identical articles bought this year amount-
ing to $19.26 Is presented as an argumentatum d<
l.nmlm-m lo the warring factions for explanation. Need-
less to say there has been none forthcoming, because,
as the people now know, there can be none except a
frank acknowledgement that the high cost of living is
due to robin ry of the people by the trusts which Repub-
lic in legislation created and armed with power to rob.
The remedy is In Democratic policies and their en-
actment Into law and the lawmaking branch of the
gocomment Is within reach of the Democrats if only
they allow wisdom and discretion to guide them.
*£*» •-'•’cwSai.V'lE - V ' uLnt1*- ^ ir i.Wv. - JfraU
y a jig jttimiingffiinfff
Wednesday, Sept. 7,1910. ^ -
LINES
A BIT OF PHILOSOPHY IN EPIGRAM
-BASILEUS
THAI man must MAKE MISTAKES, we take as a matter
■ of course; man is HUMAN when he goes WRONG,
imr DIVINE when he sees the RIGHT snd DOES IT.
THE MAN who knows the BEST should teach the REST
■ OF MEN how to advance to their greatest good—the
well meaning brother should lead another.
THE MAN who JUMPS at CONCLUSIONS is sure to “slip
* a cog;” man cannot leap from IGNORANCE to RIPE
JUDGMENT without getting a SPRAIN from his
SPRING.
MONEY COMPENSATION should not be the question in
»"■ man’s decision of the work lie should do; man's LOVE
OF HIS WORK only can save him from becoming the
shirk which would cause his boss to shelve him.
VOI R word spoken today will cither give PLEASURE or
■ will give PAIN; it you intend to BE KIND, then say
, your say, hut if yotir tongue is sharpened to give PAIN,
f then you should refrain.
CORGIVE an<l FORGET your ENEMIES, hut think often
* of your FRIENDS; man makes a business of making
friends by making the most out of his opportunities to
serve men.
CALVATION of man is not a secret; that man who secs the
GREATEST GOOD and docs it and then carries the
CHEERFUL GOSPEL to help his fellows is the mes-
senger of truth.
THIS IS a law of life to the last; you can only put on the
* GOOD by putting away the evil; you live in LOVE by
hiding away your HATE, and you see SUCCESS by
making fun of FEAR.
b
It ha, been suggested that Mr. Roosevelt be made
legal adviser to the supreme- court of the United States,
lie would not hesitate to accept the appointment ot
Archbishop of Canterbury without for a moment ques-
tioning hts entire fitneaa for the Job.
We agree with the Pittsburg Gazette that our
greatest living ex-president is too hot under the collar
to safely indulga In the use of celluloid neckwear.
Bear in mind it wag a Texan who forced the prlco
of cotton to 20 cents and made ten million dollars in
fifteen months.
An exchange announces that under an imperial
edict four hundred million Chinese are soon to he ex-
que-sed.
Alt these thirlgs that be would do for the uplift of
Ills countrymen and the development of his country are
_ _ I ✓
In his "I."
In these fire sales the ladles have so recently been
enjoying, were there any "flame colored" goods at cut
pries?
________ * / /
“Apostle of Bunco" is the way a famous English
political writer describes Mr. Roosevelt.
Nearly one-third of the economic activity
many rests today on feminine shoulders.
It is asserted that Ur. Cook Is coming Kick. Why?
I towns ©I Effl$©n°@§l3:'
of Ger-
Tbcre arc more than four hundred wireless stations
on the coast for tlu maritime nations.
Singapore is now free from plague. Smallpox Is de-
creasing owing to health office activity.
The bank of Australia had on March SI, $726,500,-
000 deposits, an increase over tho prior year of $50 -
000.000.
One largo electric company of this country spent
dining the last year nearly $1,000,000 in patents and
patent litigation.
The Nljni Novgorod fair of Russia is the greatest
market in the world. It lasts six weeks and the business
amounts to $15,000,000.
China’s capital. Pekin, has supplanted Its unsani-
tary wells with a thoroughly modern water works sys-
tem, Including a alteration plant.
India exports in 1910 fiscal year (March 3‘)
amounted to $30,000,000 and her imports to $520,000,000.
a total overseas trade of $1,150,000,000, an Increase ot
$141,000,000 over 1909.
As the motor of an aeroplane makes too much noise
for an aviator to hoar anything else, a French army of-
ficer has invented a telephone for a passenger to talk
to him.
A German expert predicts that in the near future
the artificial fertiliser chiefly used in agriculture will be
ammonia. Already sulphate of ammonia Is ahead of
saltpeter In the quantity used.
By pointing Ihe amplifying horn toward the floor
the New York Inventor of a new phonograph cabinet
claims to eliminate the metallic note and to make the
reproduced sound mor true to the original.
Denmark Is trying out a new pontoon bridge in
which the pontoons are anchored beneath the surface
of the water, the bridge remaining motionless Irrespec-
tive of the rise and fall of the tide.
The reason why Wellman selected a balloon for hia
Russian manufacturers Invert $50,009,065 annually
tn American cotton, and It la stated that should a Rus
■“-American bank be established la 8t Petersburg the
cotton Investment would reach $200,000,900 annually.
t (efgjjjg'-;? Wpi
“J3
BABY'H grandmother is often Its worst enemy."
Ho a splendid trained nurse who makes her specialty tho bring-
ing back to health of sickly babies, told me the other day.
It was a pretty harsh Indictment of that class of personage whose very
name evokes a thought of tenderness Hnd wisdom nml a sort of mellowed
and intensified motherllnesj, so naturally I demanded un explanation.
She gave It.
“They are the worst enemies of onr modern methods. Not all of them.
ot course, but some. Becatise their bahles. lived ana
grew up In spite of what mistakes they made, they
try to have their doughters make the same mistakes.
“There Is no doubt about It that modern meth-
ods have reduced infant mortality immensely, anil
though of course It’s true that plenty of babies grew
up Into healthy children with the old careless meth-
ods, a bat y brought up tn the modern way has twice
the chance to grow- up that they did.
“But the grandmothers don't see it that way.
They say all their babies grew up, or if one or two
died, they would have died anyway, no matter what
precautions were taken, and they tell their daugh-
ters that all this sterilizing and boiling and the rest
of the things that wc are trying to teach them is ail
nonsense,
“Most of them talk behind our hacks, hut once
in awhile one of them speaks right out to me, so I know about what they
say,
“Here's a few samples:
‘‘‘This feeding a baby every throe hours to the minute Is all tommyrot-
Why. when Jennie was a baby l fed her whenever she cried, and she doesn’t
look very peaked now, does she?’
“ 'This boiling the nipples and bottles is perfect nonsense. I never
boiled a thing, and I brought up five children and only lost one by cholera
infantum, and you needn't tell me any child gets cholera infantum from
not having Its nipples boiled.’
" 'Waking a child up to feed him is the silliest thing I ever heard of.
He has been under-nourished and needs the nourishment? Nonsense. I
bad eight children and I always let them sleep ns long as they would.'
“That’s the sort of thing they are continually saying, and as some of
them have more Influence than we do, the result Is that many of our most
Important Instructions are neutralized.
“Why, I even know of one baby that I am sure would be alive today
If he had had the proper care, but tlley lost him because tho mother let
‘he grandmother pooh-hooh her out of doing what the doctor and nurse
told her.
"No, grandmothers may lie well enough for older children, but a good
many of them are the babies’ worst enemies."
In the Philadelphia schools a lecture on the care of babies was given
to the little mothers of tho tenements this spring. The next day they
were asked to write an essay on the leeture, and one child of eleven brought
In this startling indictment of grandmother:
“1 never understood why m.v little brother Mikey turned over one day
after he was several months with us, and gave n little grunt and died. Now
1 believe It was because my grandmother used to feed him the same things
as she ate. Sometimes she would squeeze orange juice In his mouth and
other times she’d give him a bit of cabbage to strengthen him. I think
some germs got into these and made Mikey twist up In knots and die.”
Of course thut sort of grandmother doesn't exist among my readers,
but I have no doubt that the other kind does, and 1 think, all things con-
sidered. that her sin of pooh-hoohlng Ihe nurse’s Instructions Is quite as bad
as Ihe tenement grandmother's orange and cabbage habit.
SOUTHWESTERN NEWS
(Continued from Page Three.)
BARBER FIGHTS FOR $200,000
Mis Honiotciul Located nt t’lovD,
New Mexico, b Being Con-
tested In Courts.
KjmcIsJ lu Th,’ Tim,. J*
Albuquerque. N. ifSept. 6,—A hu-
man interest story of the vagaries of
fortune Is told by ll w. Williams, an
attorney of Clovis. New Mexico, who
Is now In San Francisco, gathering
evidence as to the naturalization and
residence of Aruthur Lelbelt of the
same place. Arthur and hi* four
brothers haxc become rich by each
taking up a government homestead of
160 acres at Clovis some years ago.
when there was not a railroad within
several miles.
Alfred, Arthur and Fritz Lelbelt
came to San Francisco from Germany
In 1903 and went to ilx-e In the Mis-
sion, w here Arthur opened a barber
shop. Two other brothels, Otto and
Curt, came shortly after. Hearing
that there was some good govern-
ment land open for settlement In New
Mexico. Alfred. Frits and Otto went
to that territory an&c, '
a quarter section of government land.
It Is situated near the present town of
Clovis. The brothers had taken out
their first papers in the United
States district court in San Francisco
for naturalization before they filed
their applications for the homesteads.
The other brothers followed after,
a no each filed application for home-
steads adjoining the first filings. It
l» alleged that in 1905 Arthur filed
his application while he w-as yet a
resident of the coast and before he
went to Now Mexico and the contest-
ant has engaged Williams to attack
Arthur's claim on the ground of
fraud.
I p to 1906 the land was of no
great money value, but in that Year
the Santa Fe railroad changed its,
course and built a cutoff at Helen and
laid out a snialftownsite of 240 acres
close to the homesteads „f the 1-el-
lielts. The railroad sold off the town
lots very cheaply and built a depot
and its machine shops on the site,
which they named Clovis. Then the
value of the land Jumped and the
town grew until It came up to the line
of the Lelbelt holdings, which are
now valued at $200,000.
Should the contestant succeed in
invalidating the homestead claim at
«**>•< Arthur, h* will be giro* a,
When You Want
Something' Out
of the Ordinary
In groceries, vegetables or fruits send us your order.
We handle only the choicest and guarantee satisfac-
tion.
Chase & Sanborn’s Coffee and Tea; Sedgwick
Creamery Butter; Club House Canned Goods are
among the many good things we handle.
JacKson’s £££?
353—Teleptiones—507
The Dick and Dot Stories
jnr
ComM* Bnk**
The Precious'Box.i
&
U 4 LONG time apo there was
j\ a thief named Ladron,” be-
*■ *■ gan the children’s Aunt
Mary. “Ladron liked to travel and
to be in crowds, and when he w,’as
present people often wondered what
had become of their purses and jew-
elry. It was in the days before rail-
roads were even thought of, and long
journeys were made by stage coach.
One morning when Ladron was wait-
ing for the coach at the White Fawn,
an inn some twenty miles from Lon-
don, his attention was attracted by a
young lady and her maid who also
were going his way. The maid
looked after the luggage, but there
was a carved ebony box about ten
inches square which the mistress
would not let out of her sight, but
kept clasped in her arms. ‘It is
casket of jewels,’ thought Ladron,
with his greedy eyes On the box, ‘and
1 am very much mistaken if it is not
mine before the day is over.’
“It so happened that there were
no passengers on the inside of the
coach save the young lady and her
maid and Ladron, and taking a seat
who is anxious to discuss a fayoritU
subject.
“ ‘La, my lady, how can you asK
such a question?’ cried the maids!
‘His eyes are as black as night, ho
is tall and graceful, while the scar
on his temple but renders him thg
more distinguished in appearance,*
to go to sleep.
“ ’I wonder if his lordship will
surely meet us in London,’ said the
mistress. m
“‘Indeed he will, my lady/w the
maid assured her. ‘Never have 1
seen a gentleman so devoted.'
“’Would you call him good look
irtg?’ asked the young Jady, as. one
“Ladron, who had not allowed a
word of their conversation to escape
him, looked out of the window when
they arrived in London and ex-
claimed, ‘What a fine looking youth!
And that scar on his temple shows
him to be no stranger to the duel.*
“‘Where is he?’ asked tho young
the opposite corner, he pretended lady, rising to her feet, and for one©
~ ‘ relinquishing her hold of the precious
box, which Ladron snatched and,
springing nimbly from the coach,
disappeared in the crowd. The box
was locked, but beirtg clever with
keys, he opened it as soon as he feltl
safe, expecting to bo dazzled by the
glitter of diamonds. And lot therg
was nothing in it but lOYC letters/’
Over six feet tall he weighed some
200 pounds and every pound of that
had been active young manhood be-
fore the accident happened which
robbed him of his power to move.
He must remain in his chair until
lifted like a baby from It. Ills arms
are still useful, but even their great
strength hns become weakened by the
Injury to hts back. Only 21 years of
age he may live for years in his help-
less condition for men 4TFten do after
such an accident
ence in filing his own application for
the land.
YOUNG COWBOY'S PITIFUL CASE
Thrown From His Horse on a I’ecos
Rauch, He Is Now FnralyzcU
Below Ills Waist
Kliccial tn The Timet.
Fort Worth, Texas, Sept. G.—It re-
quired the services or four men, two
of them negro porters accustomed to
doing heavy-lifting, to take a paralyz-
ed young man from a passenger train
that came in from the west and as the
great load of helpless humanity was
lifted from the baggage car in the
wheeled ehalr In which he had been
riding he fumed softly at his own in-
ability to help himself, while a look
of loathing for his weakness went
over his face when the chair lurch-
ed and was almost dropped to the
brick platform.
Bronzed from long association with
wind and sun, his muscled arms shin-
ing brown and smooth in the lamp-
light where his rolled-up shirtsleeves
showed the effect of out-of-door ex-
ercise long continued, there was noth-
ing about the young man to denote
an Invalid, but he is doomed to a life
of hopless Inactivity.
While riding a wild horse on $i
ranch near Pecos ten days ago ho was
thrown and his back broken. Paraly-
sis from his hips down will make it
Impossible for him to ever walk again.
But there had not been time since the
accident to take the strength from
his great nrnis and shoulders, al-
though his long legs hung like a
lump of flesh from the chair. It will
be weeks before the tan goes out of
h!s face anil arms and the muscles
Blown soft from their disuse.
The youth was Robert McDougall,
a young Scotchman, who has been a
cowpuneher for a number of years
on ihe Texas plains. He Is on route
to Chicago fo consult a specialist In
Ihe hope of being cured. A fellow
cow-puncher accompanied him and
tried in every way possible to cheer
up his friend, but Ihe outlook was
too utterly desolate for McDougall to
dee anything hopeful in it.
150,000 GOVERNMENT TROUT
PLACED IN’ COLFAX COUNTY.
gjliclol In The Timet.
Raton, N. M., Sept. 6.—Train No. 1
brought in a government fish cartfrom
the hatcheries at LeadviliJ, Colo., and.
the car was taken over the Rocky
mountain to Cimarron and Ute Park,
whore 150.00(1 brook and black spot-
ted trout will be turned loose in the
Rayado and in several private fish
ponds near Ute Park. The car is in
the service of the bureau of fish-
eries, of the department of commerce
and labor, and is regularly employed
in distributing game fish for stock-
ing pupioses to the streams of this
wcstorifpr’ountry. The ear is thorough-
ly* equipped, and in charge of five
keepers, and contains ail the appara-
tus for thi zdfq-transportation of the
minnows. The assortment taken to
Ctmarrtm yesterday were mostly black
spotted or native trout, measuring
about one-half Inch in length. The
brook trout measured an Inch. Tho
car contained Its own aepating plant,
which keeps the water cats constantly
oxygenized by the forcing of air
through the water.
EX FERMENTING WITH GUN,
BOY LOSES AN EYE.
tiperlnl to The Timet.
Tombstone, Ariz.. Sept. 6.—A most
deplorable accident occurred here
Monday when Arthur Lamb, the 13
year old son of Road Ov^jircqr laiinb,
v hile experimenting with shotgun shot
himself in tho face and will lose his
right eye as a consequence.
It appear* the young man secured
a shotgun, also some powder and
managed to load same, using a 22-
oaltbre cartridge. In firing same the
effect was a terrific “back fire" cov-
ering his face with powder burns and
Injuring the sight of birth eyes.
NATIONAL
RAILWAYS
OF
MEXICO
Excursion Rates
Via
National Railways of Mexict
Account
MEXICO’S INDEPENDENCE CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION
DURING MONTH OF SEPTEMBER.
El Paao to Mexico City and Return:
15 day ticket, first chum .........................$36.20 U. 8. Cv.
10 day ticket, first daw.............................. t, & Cy.
IS day ticket, eecond claaa.................$ie.f5 U g C’y.
30 day ticket, second ctaaa........................$211.20 U. s! Cy.
Tickets on sale Sept. 1st to Sept. 30th, Inclusive. Also Excursion
rate# to all of one and one third fares for the found trip first
and second class ticket# on sale Sept 1st to Sept 16th limit until
Sept. 25th for return. • ’
For further Information, can or adirtoa,
A, DULOHERY.T
, AfontiBi Paao, Texas.
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El Paso Morning Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 30, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 7, 1910, newspaper, September 7, 1910; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth583585/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.